The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Cleveland serial killer of 11 seeks new trial

- Andrew Welsh-Huggins Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A Cleveland man who killed 11 women and hid the remains in and around his home deserves a new trial because a judge wrongly closed a portion of jury selection and a hearing where attorneys argued about his police interrogat­ion, the serial killer’s lawyers told the Ohio Supreme Court.

Anthony Sowell was convicted and sentenced to death in 2011.

His attorneys say the judge in the case improperly closed a July 2010 hearing in which lawyers argued over an hours-long video of Sowell’s interview with police. They also said in court filings last week that the judge shouldn’t have put the individual questionin­g of potential jurors off limits to the public as the trial got underway in June of the following year, because do so violated constituti­onal requiremen­ts of trials open to the public.

The judge’s actions followed Sowell’s unsuccessf­ul attempts to have the trial moved because of intense publicity.

Prosecutor­s say Sowell should get a new evidence suppressio­n hearing, but not a new trial.

“It’s important to note that everything the judge did in this case he did to protect Anthony Sowell’s right to a fair trial,” assistant Cuyahoga County prosecutor Chris Schroeder said Tuesday. “That was the reason why he closed the courtroom.”

The evidence against Sowell, 55, now on Ohio’s death row, was overwhelmi­ng. But asking for a new trial or new hearing is more than a legal exercise, public defender Jeff Gamso said Tuesday.

“The cases that are the most difficult, the cases where the defendant is most reviled, the cases where we as a society are seemingly most happy with the outcome, the cases where things seem not to matter, those are the cases where we must be especially scrupulous,” Gamso said.

At the time of trial, prosecutor­s were so concerned about closing the individual questionin­g of jurors they sought a mistrial, a request denied by the judge.

Prosecutor­s now argue, however, that Sowell’s constituti­onal rights were not violated, because his attorneys did not object to closing the questionin­g.

“There is simply nothing in this record that suggests that Sowell — before, during, or after his trial — has ever been unhappy with the trial court’s decision to close the courtroom,” Cuyahoga County prosecutor­s wrote.

 ?? Tony Dejak/Associated Press ?? Anthony Sowell sits in court in Cleveland during a pre-trial hearing. The Ohio Supreme Court is weighing arguments by attorneys for Sowell that he deserves a new trial because a hearing about the suppressio­n of evidence was closed to the public. The...
Tony Dejak/Associated Press Anthony Sowell sits in court in Cleveland during a pre-trial hearing. The Ohio Supreme Court is weighing arguments by attorneys for Sowell that he deserves a new trial because a hearing about the suppressio­n of evidence was closed to the public. The...

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